
Born in 1943 and raised in Indiana, Gary
Burton taught himself to play the vibraphone and, at the
age of 17, made his recording debut in Nashville, Tennessee,
with guitarists Hank Garland and Chet Atkins. Two years later,
Burton left his studies at Berklee College of Music to join
George Shearing and subsequently Stan Getz, with whom he
worked from 1964-1966. Borrowing rhythms and sonorities from
rock music, while maintaining jazz's emphasis on improvisation
and harmonic complexity, Burton 's first quartet attracted
large audiences from both sides of the jazz-rock spectrum.
Burton's burgeoning popularity was quickly validated by
Down Beat magazine, which awarded him its Jazzman of the
Year award in 1968 and his 1971 album Alone
at Last was honored with a Grammy Award. Burton also
turned to the rarely heard duo format, recording with bassist
Steve Swallow, guitarist Ralph Towner, and most notably with
pianist Chick Corea, thus cementing a long personal and professional
relationship that has garnered an additional two Grammy Awards.
Also in the '70s, Burton began his career with Berklee College
of Music in Boston. Burton began as a teacher of percussion
and improvisation classes at Berklee in 1971. In 1985 he
was named Dean of Curriculum. In 1989, he received an honorary
doctorate of music from the college, and in 1996, he was
appointed Executive Vice President. Burton continues to record
extensively and his most recent release in 2002 is a unique
project with Makoto Ozone, his pianist collaborator of the
past twenty years. In Virtuosi the pair explore
the improvisational possibilities of classical themes including
works by Brahms, Scarlatti, Ravel, Barber and others. In
an unusual move, the Recording Academy nominated Virtuosi in
the classical category of the Grammy awards.
Gary Burton appears in Jazz Virtuosi on January 21
and 23, 2005.
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